Street battles as ISIL enters Syria's Kobane

Fighters from ISIL have penetrated the Syrian town Kobane for the first time, sparking street-to-street fighting and an order from its Kurdish defenders for all civilians to flee.

Two black ISIL flags were seen flying on Kobane's eastern side on Monday, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, while there were reports of ISIL fighters entering the town from the east.

"Urban guerrilla warfare has started and the fighting is taking place for the first time in districts at the eastern entrance, in Maqtala al-Jadida and Qani Arab," said Rami Abdelrahman, the observatory's head.

The AFP news agency quoted a spokesman for Kurdish forces as saying that all civilians had been told to leave immediately.

"Military officials asked civilians to evacuate - they declared Kobane a military area," said the spokesman identified by AFP as Mustafa Bali. "ISIL advanced to the eastern side. There were fierce clashes in the streets," he added.

According to Al Jazeera sources, the clashes in Qani Arab are the heaviest since the start of the offensive as ISIL tries to bring in more fighters to take control of the city.

Kurdish activists stated that one group of ISIL fighters were eliminated by the town's defenders, drawn from the Kurdish irregular force known as the YPG, as they attempted to enter from the east.

The advances came after ISIL fighters seized part of Mishtenur Hill, which overlooks Kobane, late on Saturday, although US-led air attacks tried to slow the fighters’ advances.

The UK-based observatory added that at least 20 fighters were killed late on Sunday when they entered an eastern neighbourhood and were ambushed by Kurdish YPG fighters.

In a sign of mounting desperation, a Kurdish female fighter blew herself up at an ISIL position east of Kobane on Sunday, the observatory said. It was the first reported instance of a female Kurdish fighter employing a tactic often used by ISIL fighters.

Analyst says Turkey cannot fight ISIL for the Kurds

According to Reuters news agency, at least 30 Kurdish fighters were killed in two suicide attacks on two checkpoints run by Kurds in Syria's northeastern city of Hasakah.

The Turkish parliament in Ankara last week authorised the government to join a US-led campaign against ISIL, but no plans for military action have been announced so far.

Al Jazeera's Bernard Smith, reporting from Urfa in Turkey, said that the country has found itself in an "incredibly difficult position".

"Turkey doesn't want to see an autonomous Kurdish-area on its border with Syria, while it doesn't want ISIL to be in power either. And it doesn't want Bashar al-Assad to take control of the area either," he said.

He said that Kurds are asking Turkey to allow more of its fighters into Syria, but "it doesn't want to see it backfire in the future".